1. Optic aphasia with pure alexia: a mild form of visual associative agnosia? A case study.
- Author
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Chanoine V, Ferreira CT, Demonet JF, Nespoulous JL, and Poncet M
- Subjects
- Aged, Agnosia psychology, Aphasia psychology, Attention, Brain Mapping, Cerebral Infarction diagnosis, Cerebral Infarction psychology, Discrimination Learning, Dyslexia, Acquired psychology, Humans, Male, Mental Recall, Neuropsychological Tests, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Perceptual Disorders psychology, Semantics, Agnosia diagnosis, Aphasia diagnosis, Dyslexia, Acquired diagnosis, Perceptual Disorders diagnosis, Visual Perception
- Abstract
A single-case study is reported of a naming disorder selective to the visual modality. The patient showed intact access to structural knowledge of objects and letters, but impaired access to complete semantic knowledge of objects and alphabetical knowledge of letters from visual input. The impairment was most striking when the patient had to discriminate between semantically similar objects or within a given symbolic repertoire, i.e. letters. The co-occurrence of a partial deficit of visual recognition for objects and for letters indicated features of optic aphasia and pure alexia. This symmetric performance between object and letter processing may also constitute a mild form of visual associative agnosia.
- Published
- 1998
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